Have you ever wanted to walk where Jesus walked and experience the land of the Bible?
On Monday, October 13 @ 10:00 am in Heath 102, you can learn more about the Israel/Jordan study tour May 18-June 12, 2015. Scholarships and 3 transfer units may be available. Visit http://holylandsstudies.org/

]]>http://www.vanguard.edu/religion/travel-to-the-bible-lands/feed/0Greet & Treats!http://www.vanguard.edu/religion/greet-treats/
http://www.vanguard.edu/religion/greet-treats/#commentsThu, 25 Sep 2014 20:20:10 +0000http://www.vanguard.edu/religion/?p=1334On Monday, August 25, 2014 the Department of Religion hosted an Open House. All Religion majors and any interested students were invited to a time for Greet and Treats! Each student received an information packet and traveled office to office to meet the Religion professors.

We are so excited for this new school year! It was a wonderful time meeting returning students and welcoming new students!

]]>http://www.vanguard.edu/religion/greet-treats/feed/0A Missional Orthodoxy: Theology and Ministry in a Post-Christian Context, Gary Tyra, D. Minhttp://www.vanguard.edu/religion/a-missional-orthodoxy-theology-and-ministry-in-a-post-christian-context-gary-tyra-d-min/
http://www.vanguard.edu/religion/a-missional-orthodoxy-theology-and-ministry-in-a-post-christian-context-gary-tyra-d-min/#commentsMon, 02 Dec 2013 23:31:18 +0000http://www.vanguard.edu/religion/?p=973Dr. Gary Tyra, Professor of Religion in our Professional Studies program published a new book A Missional Orthodoxy: Theology and Ministry in a Post-Christian Context

The emerging and missional church movements have raised decisive questions about what it means to embody the Christian faith in a post-Christian and postmodern world. A common reactionary response denies the significance of the context and reasserts the supremacy of classical orthodoxy. An equally common position at the other end of the spectrum involves a rejection of orthodoxy as contextually insensitive and incapable of being inclusive and missional at all. The one asserts its orthodoxy at the expense of being missional and contextual; the other emphasizes generosity at the expense of its fidelity to “the faith that was once for all entrusted to the saints” (Jude 1:3). The church today needs a theology that is both orthodox and missional–doing justice to both aspects. Gary Tyra has written just such a book. In A Missional Orthodoxy he critically engages with the works of Brian McLaren and Marcus Borg for the sake of developing a comprehensive missional theology that retains what he calls the “four Christological verities” at the heart of Christian doctrine. Tyra discusses the methodological question of contextualization, offering an incarnational model of recontextualization that unites the postmodern insights of the culture with the truths of the biblical text. On the basis of this missional foundation, he examines all the major Christian doctrines in order to overcome the false antithesis between a fighting fundamentalism and a too-accommodating liberalism. The result is a humble, modest, missionally faithful orthodoxy that provides a compelling witness within a world of competing extremes.